Let God Come

 

 

 

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When we began our Spanish worship night, it was to provide an opportunity for our workers and families to seek the presence of God.  And as we have continued, God has been faithful to bring this group back week after week.  It is the young people that are hungry for something…. something that they cannot put into words.  Something that keeps them coming back.  And it is just what God has purposed for them here – to know God and to seek His truth.  So many of them have been broken – by their families, by the church, by broken promises.

It is something different – something different for them to experience.  And as I have learned, different many times teaches us more of who God is.  More of what God wants for us.  It has been my hope that these students can learn how to encounter God and hear His voice.  To know His truth.  And so we seek opportunities to open the door.  Opportunities for His truth to shine through.

These opportunities have brought about conversations that show how God is working in their hearts – how God is working in the hearts of all of us.  They are seeking acceptance.  They are seeking to know who this God is and what he has for them.  They are seeking to choose the right path.  And we want to encourage all of this.  I have seen change.  I have seen hope.  And this encourages me to press on.  Please pray for them.

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Currently my favorite Spanish worship song

Dame Tus Ojos

Dame tus ojos, quiero ver
Dame tus palabras, quiero hablar
Dame tu parecer

Dame tus pies, yo quiero ir
Dame tus deseos para sentir
Dame tu parecer

Dame lo que necesito
Para ser como tu

Coro:
Dame tu voz, dame tu aliento
Toma mi tiempo es para ti
Dame el camino que debo seguir
Dame tus sueños, tus anhelos
Tus pensamientos, tu sentir
Dame tu vida para vivir

Déjame ver lo que tu ves
Dame de tu gracia, tu poder
Dame tu corazón

Déjame ver en tu interior
Para ser cambiado por tu amor
Dame tu corazón

 

Give Me Your Eyes

Give me your eyes, I want to see
Give me your words, I want to speak
Give me your likeness

Give me your feet, I want to go
Give me your desires to feel
Give me your likeness

Give me what I need
To be like you

Chorus:
Give me your voice, give me your breath
Take my time; it’s for you
Give me the way I should follow
Give me your dreams, your desires
Your thoughts, your way to feel
Give me your life to live

Let me see what you see
Give me your grace, your power
Give me your heart

Let me see inside you
To be changed by your love
Give me your heart

New Faces

June was a CRAZY month as we hosted two LARGE teams, had a family of 8 join our ministry as well as two other volunteers for the school and other random visitors during the month.  Needless to say, it was constant around here.  A constant that I welcomed because much of the help that has come will focus at the school, but it certainly made June fly by.  Here are a few of the new faces around here.

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Worship time with the team at the school and visiting the Gardners.

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Trevor doing a physics lab.

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Lauren and Taylor doing lab with the kids.

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Megan, Lauren and Taylor

 

With new faces comes change and adjustment and living together in community.  It is not the natural way of doing things and it is not necessarily what we are accustomed to doing as Americans… but little by little, we are learning how to do this.  Each of these faces brings a heart for the people here, a heart for education and a desire to interact and love those that God places in their path.  And for this – I am thankful for these faces around here.

Hospital Update

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It is not always easy to see the progress in pictures. Plumbing, electrical work, and groundwork are some of the things that take the most time and yet are hidden.  But as you can see from the top picture – more and more rooms are taking shape.  We are far from finished, but today I walked through the hospital room by room and could see it coming to life.  I could see people walking through the corridors, I could see beds and nurses and the kitchen full of people.

 

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This shows the height of the walls – now just for the roof.

 

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There is progress that is being made on the well – which is an exciting thing for the biology teacher in me…. they have hit quartz!  Only a few hundred feet to go before (we hope) to hit that endless supply of water!

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Fourth of July

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No, we don’t celebrate the Fourth of July here.  There were no fireworks.  No mention of it actually BUT there was a “Rally” in town that just so happened to fall on this weekend.  So we will count is as our 4th of July celebration.  Plus I wanted to share about what “FUN” is around here.

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Needless to say – this activity provided a positive energy outlet to those involved and they were smiling – two things I like to see!

 

 

New Creation

We had to opportunity to teach some lessons in the elementary school here in town. There was a group here from the states that we teamed with the share the transformation of a butterfly – and coupled this with the fact that in Christ we are a new Creation.

My heart is in teaching and I was really thankful for the opportunity to visit and to see the innerworkings of a school here.  For having so many kids, they were cooperative as well – and I definitely left the day exhausted.

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Drawing the life cycle of a butterfly.

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Luis sharing how Jesus changes your life.

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Me teaching about butterflies.

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Playing with the kids

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Very thankful that God blessed me with a teacher voice this day!

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Teaching the key verse –  Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.  The old has passed away and the new has come.  2 Corinthians 5:17

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Teaching at the Chiminisijuan school

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You Said….

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You said, ask and you will receive…. Whatever you need.

You said, pray and you’ll hear from heaven…..and I’ll heal your land.

Tonight starts our continual prayer and worship sets for 72 hours straight.  The above signs are what hang at the school inviting those to come…. And so we ask …. For the nations…. We ask for the youth of this area. Please pray for all involved as we go forward. That the spirit moves and that hearts are open.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Darkness

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Darkness.

This is one of the themes I have thought about a lot in the last month – figuratively, literally, and spiritually.  The sun shines most days in Guatemala.  There is color all around.  It does not appear dark -but you can feel the darkness at times.  Actually, most of the time.

I went to market today – an area that is bursting at the seems with people and chaos.  People are shouting, kids are running around, everyone is moving.  And as I walked through I heard screaming – very high pitched screaming.  At first I thought it was a pig being led through the streets, but as I got closer I realized the sounds were coming from the back of a white truck.  I tried to read what was written on the sign from a distance, but the screams haunted me and I did not want to get close.  Written on the side was “Fantasia” but the sounds coming from inside were anything but a fantasy world.  The screams were of fear and being hurt, not of enjoyment.

Darkness.

Ironically this truck was parked outside of the Catholic church.  It was also accompanied by other demonstrations of “magic” and other “healings” that you could receive.  To me – it was a demonstration of how dark this area is and how great the need continues to be.  Sometimes while you live here you do not realize the oppression that falls on this place.  You do not realize the heaviness that can entangle the people here.  Yet when I leave, I realize it the most.  When I set foot in a place that is not surrounded by this oppression.  When I am among people who have not be strangled with this fear.

Darkness. While I was gone a boy who was only 12 committed suicide.  12 years old.  Still in elementary school.  A cry of desperation.  A demonstration of the need to be released from this spirit that resides here.

And so we pray.  More feverently.  More passionately than we have before.  That the youth in this area would step into the light.

For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. – Ephesians 6:12

Reflections on Home…

 

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An article came out about a year ago that I read titled – Why Missionaries Can Never Go Home Again…. and many of the comments resonated within.  As I read it again, I was reminded of many of the things that struck me with this time back home again.  Everyone who is serving in a different country chooses to do time at home differently.  Some rotate home for a year.  Others rotate home on months.  Some come back to their home country very briefly and others choose to never return.  For me it has been sporadic – and each time increasingly more disconnected.  There is not easy way to connect.

 I had someone ask me if I felt more at home in America or more at home in Guatemala – and the truth is – neither.  You feel on a bridge.  Only at home in some areas of your life.  Never at home in all of them.  Guatemala will never become home because a piece of you is in the states and the states will never be home again because a piece of you will always be in Guatemala.

Life continues on while you are gone and the changes magnify.  Even if you have talked with friends and family while you were gone, there is so much of their lives that you have missed – each time it is like starting over again.  Their kids no longer recognize you, people don’t know what to ask – so they don’t ask, and you have missed so much.

It is hard to relate to my American friends because you are so separated from American culture and living as Americans do – and they cannot relate to what goes on in Guatemala because the ideas are so foreign to them.  Many times you talk about what you are doing, but you summarize by cutting out each part of your life that others would not relate to… and that leaves a three minute summary.  When you come back from a short term trip, there are so many more things to talk about because each day was exciting and new.  Now each day is real life.  Each day consists of routines.  And the days flow together to create life as it now is.

As I have returned to the states I find myself driving down streets in town noticing how far apart the houses are and how much privacy everyone has (previously I felt claustrophobic when living in town).

I notice how green and lush it is and how empty the yards and streets are – not cluttered with dogs and pigs and chickens and plastic chairs and clothes hanging on barbed wire fences.

When I see Spanish, I find myself reading the Spanish, before the English that is right beside it.

I walk through stores and on the streets invisible – without the pressure to greet everyone that walks by.  And if someone does happen to say something, my immediate response is “Adios” – without even thinking.

I forget how scheduled lives have become and how strictly we stick to those schedules.  And how I feel now that I won’t ever really have a schedule again in my life.

I notice that I am the only one who doesn’t notice it is raining and look to immediately go inside or that there is grass all over my feet and I don’t feel the need to immediately wash it off.

I notice that when the music gets fuzzy on the radio, I still think it is amazing to be able to be surrounded by music while driving on a smooth road.

You complain about less, and embrace more.  And for this I am grateful for my years living with less and loving more.  Days of frustration with living outside of my culture that have led to surrendering many of the things in life that don’t matter – there may be grass on the floor, my clothes may not completely match and the music might be a little fuzzy – but they are all now acceptable and welcomed.

 

I will quote the article here and add the entire link below if you would like to read it…

Home is no longer home.  And sadly, that other place on the mission field will never truly be home either.  Home is both places, and neither place, at the same time.  

When at “home”, the missionary dreams about their host country.
When in their host country, the missionary dreams about their home country.

Missionaries are forever caught between two worlds.  They can no longer completely identify with the people whom they left behind in the home country. But they can never truly identify with the people in their host country.

Home is everywhere.
Home is nowhere.

But that’s okay.  There have been other travelers on this road.

“These all died in faith, not having received the things promised, but having seen them and greeted them from afar, and having acknowledged that they were strangers and exiles on the earth.  For people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland.  If they had been thinking of that land from which they had gone out, they would have had opportunity to return.  But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared for them a city.” (Hebrews 11:13-16)

While here on earth, we will always feel a bit unsettled and out of place.  Missionaries and those of us living away from the place we grew up may experience that more than others. But someday, all those who trust in the Lord Jesus Christ will finally be home again.

 

http://www.dahlfred.com/index.php/blogs/gleanings-from-the-field/747-why-missionaries-can-never-go-home-again

 

Dia de la Familia

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Most of the schools around here celebrate the day of the Mother (Mother’s Day), but we celebrate the Day of the Family because many of our students do not have mothers or fathers present here in Canilla.  On this day we invite the families to participate in different activities and the students did performances for their families.

For me it is an opportunity to see the students interact with their families and to meet caregivers of the students here.  I enjoy this part of the day just as much as the activities.  Here are a few pictures from our day.

 

 

Quinto performing their drama

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Shirley and her dad feeding each other blindfolded

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Students from Cuarto singing their song

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Waiting for the day to start

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Susan, Sharon and Rosa

 

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Jose, Victor and Bryan

 

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Luis talking to Tevin and Yonal

 

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Maria’s family enjoying Iced Coffee

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Hair Braiding by the spouses

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Kenly, Sharon, Yakelin and Ericka

 

And then there was rain…. that one time….

It seems now as if it were just a dream.  I should have known that the rain was a little premature.  We had five straight days of rain.  More than I remember from last year.  And the heat lifted and it was cool again.  I could sleep at night and everything turned green.  And then it stopped.  Like I said, it was just a tease.  But during that time, the men were at the gate constantly asking for tractor work.  I hope their crops make it and the rains return again soon.  It has been ten days now without rain.

During that time they poured more cement, which proved to be a challenge as well since the rain effects the whole process.  Trying to time it can be tricky.

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Emergency Room

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Panoramic of the Interior Courtyard

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Prayer Room Walls

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Emergency Room Floor

School continues with a Semester Break in June.  Here are a few pictures of biology lab

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It is basketball season here.  I have yet to figure out what constitutes basketball season.  There is no snow, no indoor gym and I am not sure why they pick the hottest, driest time of the year…. but I will go with it.  Some girls from town came to me to ask me to help them and I said no… and then their coaches asked me… so I tried to help with a few things and make sure everyone enjoyed the experience.  It is a community event for sure and the girls really, really care if they win or lose.  Granted for me it is a bit of a challenge since the rules are different, the language is different and they have never seen a court drawn on a piece of paper before.  Infact, in the last game we were not even sure who won or lost.  They celebrated as if they won, but then they were told that they wouldn’t advance.  Very vague. All in all, for me basketball has been a ministry for me.  My freshmen year of college I remember when God clearly spoke to me about using basketball as a way to glorify him and enjoying my time on the court.  And I had felt over the last year that I needed to do this here even though it was so different from in the states.  It is not a popular sport.  You have to convince them to run sometimes.  And it is a hard sport to play because it has so many rules.  What has made me smile the most through the whole experience is seeing the attitude change in the girls as I have tried to instill in them that their actions matter and can determine the outcome in a game.  I have been pleasantly surprised that God even gave me a little natural talent.  Now if I could only understand why they call a lay-up a triple.

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Playing against San Andres

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Our school playing

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Playing in Canilla

During that time as well, I learned that driving in the mud on a motorcycle is like driving in the snow.  Too bad I have never driven a motorcycle in the snow.  I will need to practice before I take any trips up any mountains.